• t

    From Ghostwriter@nospam@noway.nohow.com to alt.ham-radio.packet on Tue Jan 23 01:42:26 2007
    From Newsgroup: alt.ham-radio.packet

    ryryryryryryryryryry
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  • From I. Care@icare@spamthis.com to alt.ham-radio.packet on Tue Jan 23 09:28:00 2007
    From Newsgroup: alt.ham-radio.packet

    In article <Xns98C14E4C53694nospamnowaynohowcom@216.196.109.145>, nospam@noway.nohow.com says...
    ryryryryryryryryryry

    Why not just post your actual msg. and see if it comes through? Then
    you don't have to post 2 msgs.



    Usually the NG alt.test is used for test posts so as to not clutter the
    NG's. Not that they aren't already cluttered........


    From Indiana University

    http://kb.iu.edu/data/afcj.html

    How can I test-post a Usenet news article?

    Note: You should never post a test article to a regular newsgroup. It's
    an expensive waste of Usenet resources. Even if you send a test message
    to the newusers groups, with a polite subject line like "test, please
    ignore", you're guaranteed to receive lots of angry replies.

    There are several test newsgroups you can use for test-posting Usenet articles. Check for local test newsgroups first; if you have access to
    one, UITS strongly recommends that you use it rather than a global test
    group.

    To test a world-distribution newsgroup, use misc.test or alt.test .
    However, use these newsgroups only when you are testing distribution,
    and not just for casually testing a newsreader.

    Various sites will auto-respond to any message posted to misc.test,
    which is one way of knowing whether your message got through or not. But
    if that's not what you're testing, the auto-responses can be annoying,
    and you should put the word "ignore" in your subject line to suppress
    them. You can also try restricting distribution on your test post by
    changing the "Distribution:" header on your post to local .

    From http://www.newsreaders.com/guide/netiquette.html

    The Seven Dont's of Usenet
    http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/usenet/dont.html

    Item #4.....Don't post test messages ("will this come thru?") to any
    group which is not specifically designated as a test group (such as news.test)....

    From http://www.savetz.com/yic/YIC05FI_17.html

    5.17. How do I know my messages are really propagating on the Usenet?
    When you post a message to any newsgroup, it should--depending on your
    type of Internet access--start showing up on other sites within a few
    minutes or hours.

    If you are not sure whether your postings are leaving your site, post a
    test message to one of the major Usenet testing grounds such as alt.test
    or news.test. Out in the vast reaches of the Usenet, some sites have set
    up programs, called autoresponders, that automatically send e-mail
    replies to messages posted to the biggie test newsgroups. The
    autoresponders are cool because: 1) you get to see that your message is reaching other sites, and 2) you get lots of e-mail from all over the
    world.

    From http://oakroadsystems.com/genl/unice.htm

    # Stick to the topic: Yes, each newsgroup has a topic | Post tests
    in the right place

    http://oakroadsystems.com/genl/unice.htm#test

    Post tests in the right place

    Don't post tests in a regular group and annoy everyone. Use misc.test, alt.test, or alt.binaries.test that's what they're there for.

    From Duke EDU

    http://www.duke.edu/eng169s2/group4/alok/English/netiq.htm

    If you want to do a test post, post only to newsgroups designed for that purpose like misc.test, alt.test, or a local testing bed. This way you
    save us the trouble of seeing "testing, please ignore" messages.

    From University of Chicago

    http://support.uchicago.edu/docs/misc/usenet/newsetiq.html

    Be A Good Net.Citizen

    Post test postings in test groups.
    --
    I. Care
    Address fake until the SPAM goes away ;-}
    --
    I. Care
    Address fake until the SPAM goes away ;-}
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